Bohn Kirsten M, Wilkinson Gerald S, Moss Cynthia F
Department of Biology, University of Maryland.
Anim Behav. 2007 Mar;73(3):423-432. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2006.09.003.
In colonial species, recognition of offspring should be under strong selection. For accurate identification to occur offspring must emit individually distinctive signals and parents must be able to discriminate between signals. Female greater spear-nosed bats (Phyllostomus hastatus) roost in stable social groups and use infant vocalizations, termed isolation calls, to locate and identify their young. In this study, we investigate both the production and perception of isolation calls in P. hastatus. First, we measured acoustic features and found that after controlling for ontogenetic effects, sufficient variation exists between pups for isolation calls to function as individual signatures. Moreover, pups from the same social group emit calls with more similar spectral and spectro-temporal features than pups from different social groups, indicating that these features are likely heritable. We used psychoacoustic experiments in the laboratory to determine if adult females could discriminate between calls from pups in the same or different social group. Females discriminated between pups when faced with a template-matching task and their performance was correlated with the salience of spectral and spectro-temporal features. We found no difference in performance when females had to discriminate between pups from the same and different social groups. These results indicate that females should be able to accurately identify their young using isolation calls.
在集群物种中,对后代的识别应该受到强烈的选择作用。为了实现准确识别,后代必须发出个体独特的信号,并且父母必须能够区分这些信号。雌性大矛鼻蝠(Phyllostomus hastatus)栖息在稳定的社会群体中,并利用幼崽的叫声(称为隔离叫声)来定位和识别它们的幼崽。在这项研究中,我们调查了大矛鼻蝠隔离叫声的产生和感知。首先,我们测量了声学特征,发现在控制个体发育影响后,幼崽之间存在足够的差异,使得隔离叫声能够作为个体特征发挥作用。此外,来自同一社会群体的幼崽发出的叫声在频谱和频谱时间特征上比来自不同社会群体的幼崽更相似,这表明这些特征可能是可遗传的。我们在实验室中使用心理声学实验来确定成年雌性是否能够区分来自同一或不同社会群体幼崽的叫声。当面对模板匹配任务时,雌性能够区分幼崽,并且它们的表现与频谱和频谱时间特征的显著性相关。当雌性必须区分来自同一和不同社会群体的幼崽时,我们发现它们的表现没有差异。这些结果表明,雌性应该能够利用隔离叫声准确识别它们的幼崽。